PUBLIC INFORMATION
AND EDUCATION
Keeping you informed of
events, news and resources concerning Mental Health, Mental Retardation
and Developmental Disabilities
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 17, 2003
615.532.6610 (OFFICE)
HUD HONORS HOUSING OFFICE AND
TENNESSEE FAIR HOUSING COUNCIL
PARTNERSHIP IN PROMOTING FAIR HOUSING FOR PEOPLE
WITH MENTAL ILLNESS RECOGNIZED
NASHVILLE, TN - The Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Developmental
Disabilities’ Office of Housing Planning and Development
(OHPD) and the Tennessee Fair Housing Council were recently honored
with a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
Best Practice award for their partnership in promoting fair housing
for people with mental illness and co-occuring disorders.
The two agencies were among 14 others across the nation whose projects
were highlighted for their innovation and effectiveness. The Council
is a private, non-profit organization whose mission is to combat
housing discrimination in Tennessee.
A national committee that included leaders and experts from the
housing industry, public interest groups and non-profit fair housing
agencies selected the 14 Best Practice Award recipients. Applicants
were selected based on how well their projects reach underserved
communities and how easily their projects can be replicated.
Virginia Trotter Betts, Commissioner of the Department of Mental
Health and Developmental Disabilities, said that affordable housing
is a dream of all Americans, including individuals who have a
mental illness.
“The Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities
is committed to the goal of recovery and we
believe that safe housing is one of the essential fundamentals
to a recovery process,” Betts said. “Receiving this
highly competitive award affirms a national recognition of Tennessee’s
efforts and vision.”
The Tennessee partnership involves educating the general public
about the fair housing rights of people with mental illness and
other disabilities to live in residential neighborhoods, whether
individually or in groups sharing a household. The partnership
supports the department’s Creating Homes Initiative, a project
that began in 2001 with the goal of developing 2005 new, permanent
housing units for people with mental illness by 2005. The goal
was surpassed in late 2002 and another goal of 2005 units has
been set.
Director of the OHPD Marie Williams, L.C.S.W., said the award is
a true testament to the incredible outcomes that occur when people
work together to leverage resources to establish communities of
inclusion, rather than exclusion.
“It has been a true joy and hope-filled experience to work
with Tracey McCartney of the Tennessee Fair Housing Council to
effectively further the rights of persons with mental illness
to live in safe, affordable and quality housing,” said Williams.
As part of the project, the Council researched, wrote and distributed
three handbooks with distinct target audiences - providers of
housing and other services for people with disabilities, public
officials and homeowners who may be concerned about housing for
people with disabilities in their neighborhoods. All three handbooks
provide an overview of federal and state fair housing law and
of research showing that such housing does not create declines
in property values or safety in residential neighborhoods. A handbook
for attorneys currently is under development.
Executive Director of the Tennessee Fair Housing Council, Tracey
McCartney, said that the project could not have been as successful
as it has been without the excellent working relationship with
the staff at the Department of Mental Health and Developmental
Disabilities.
“The Department’s decision to make civil rights an
issue of importance alongside the shortage of appropriate housing
for people with disabilities puts it at the forefront of state
agencies of its kind nationwide,” McCartney said.
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